The Lantern - February 28 2017

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TUESDAY

THURSDAY

CRIME MAP

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Get a roundup of crime on and around campus from the past week.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

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Buckeyes share their thoughts on divestment ballot issue.

FINAL MOVE

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Soon-to-be graduates of the dance department are set to stage their capstone performances.

VARLON REED

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The former Buckeye plays indoor football, which he describes as his career’s low-point.

The student voice of the Ohio State University

Tuesday, February 28, 2017

thelantern.com

@TheLantern

Student dies after parking garage fall

Year 137, Issue No. 14

Conversatives funding student government campaigns across US NICK ROLL Campus Editor roll.66@osu.edu

MASON SWIRES | ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR

Columbus Division of Police and University Police officers gather outside of the Ohio Union South Garage following a woman’s fall off of one of the floors of the garage. LANTERN STAFF lanternnewsroom@gmail.com An Ohio State student who fell off the Ohio Union garage Monday afternoon has died, OSU confirmed in a statement. The female student fell from the Ohio Union South Garage just before 2 p.m., according to witnesses. Emergency responders arrived shortly thereafter and the woman was taken by ambulance to the OSU Wexner Medical Center in critical condition, OSU spokes-

man Ben Johnson said in an earlier statement. The university identified the student as Madison Paul. According to the OSU directory, she was studying neuroscience. Her Facebook page states she started attending OSU in 2016. Karina Nelson, a first-year in arts management, said she was walking by when she witnessed Paul’s fall. Nelson, who called 911, said she didn’t appear to have fallen on accident. Johnson said in a statement that police are actively investigating

the situation and foul play is not currently believed to be involved. Jimmy Kinderdine, a fourth-year in public affairs who works in the alumni association located in the Ohio Union, said his friend came into the office to ask for scissors because the group assisting the woman was trying to remove the “sweatshirts and clothing wrapped around her head.” When Kinderdine got to the scene, a person providing preliminary care asked him to search the FALL CONTINUES ON 2

InFACT to bring healthy food to OSU ERIN GOTTSACKER Lantern reporter gottsacker.2@osu.edu Although Ohio’s economy is largely based on agriculture, many people in Ohio do not have access to healthy food. In fact, according to the United States Department of Agriculture, 16 percent of households in Ohio are food insecure, well above national and regional averages. A team of researchers at Ohio State is addressing this problem as part of the Initiative for Food and AgriCultural Transformation by researching food production and distribution systems at OSU, in Columbus and around the world. “Food insecurity goes beyond whether a person is hungry or not,” said Brian Snyder, the executive director of InFACT. “Food

“Any person should be able to find out where (the food on campus) came from, how it was processed and how it was produced, so it isn’t anonymous food ... That’s the enemy — food we know nothing about.”

Turning Point USA, a conservative nonprofit group with university chapters across the country, is set on putting money into Ohio State’s Undergraduate Student Government campaign. Exactly which OSU campaign TPUSA is funding is being disputed by various parties involved, but leaked text-message exchanges and audio point to a nationwide effort to put conservative students into student governments at colleges across the U.S. In leaked exchanges, made in late January, a representative from TPUSA said the organization has about $6,000 set aside to directly give to the campaign for Mary Honaker and Carla Gracia and the senators running on their slate. Another representative offered up to $3,000 on behalf of TPUSA to pay students to campaign for them. After initially claiming not to know about the alleged financing, Michael Frank, the campaign manager for the Honaker and Gracia campaign, said TPUSA reached out to the campaign, but was rebuffed. A similar statement from Kennedy Copeland, a student at Xavier University and a TPUSA leadership director, confirmed that TPUSA attempted to support Honaker and Gracia, and goes on to say TPUSA was rebuffed. Co-

COURTESY OF THE CAMPAIGN

USG candidates Mary Honaker and Carla Gracia. peland initially denied knowledge of TPUSA funding student government campaigns, specifically the Honaker and Gracia campaign. Frank and Copeland’s statements say that TPUSA is in fact supporting another USG ticket, that of brothers Reagan and Reese Brooks, both third years in marketing. The Brooks brothers have denied that charge. “That is utterly false and baseless,” said Devin Bilski, a fourthyear in marketing and political science and the campaign manager for the Brooks brothers. “I think the evidence speaks for itself where the money is coming.” Regardless of whom TPUSA is supporting at OSU, TPUSA’s interest in OSU’s USG race is clear. Additionally, the leaked texts and audio point toward a larger, national goal by TPUSA. “A huge part of what Turning Point does — that’s really important to donors — is student government races,” Alana Mastrangelo, TPUSA’s Heartland Regional Director, said in a phone call recorded by an OSU student who was recruited by TPUSA to run for USG CONTINUES ON 2

WOMEN’S HOCKEY

Sauve’s record-breaking season a product of her love for hockey

Brian Snyder Executive director, InFACT

security is a bigger idea. Does a person or does a family normally have access to good, healthy food so there’s not a sense of anxiety all the time about where their food is coming from?” InFACT is working to eliminate food insecurity not only by encouraging research, but also by developing sustainable models of food production and distribution that can be tested at OSU before being applied to regional, and even global, food systems. Currently, InFACT is work-

ing to ensure that within the next 10 years, 40 percent of the food provided on campus is locally and sustainably produced, while providing complete transparency about where and how the rest of the food provided on campus is produced. “Any person should be able to find out where (the food on campus) came from, how it was processed and how it was produced, so it isn’t anonymous food,” Snyder said. “That’s the enemy — SUICIDE CONTINUES ON 2

MAGEE SPRAGUE | LANTERN REPORTER

Redshirt sophomore goaltender Kassidy Sauve stares down a sliding puck against St. Cloud State on Feb. 4 at the OSU Ice Rink. Her 1,086 saves this year set an NCAA single-season record. | ONLINE


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